On
Tuesday, February 26th, more than 40 area restaurants will be contributing 15% of
their day’s proceeds to Animal Compassion Network’s highly successful spay and
neuter assistance program. The commemorative Tenth Annual Dine
to Be Kind will take place on National Spay Day as part of a national
campaign to promote the life-saving benefits of spay and neuter programs for
dogs and cats.
Proceeds
from Dine to be Kind will benefit ACN’s Betty Fund Spay/Neuter
Program which was established in 2000 in honor of a two-year-old stray Golden
Retriever mix. Betty gave birth to 18 puppies in just one year. It wasn't until
Animal Compassion Network became involved that this distressing cycle stopped.
Betty's last litter of eight pups was rescued from the mud underneath a trailer
and found forever homes through ACN. Betty was also rescued, spayed, and placed
with a loving family. The cost of this one rescue alone was staggering;
hundreds of dollars were spent in medical expenses, food, and care for the dog
and her eight pups. In response, ACN started the Betty Fund spay/neuter voucher
program designed to help end the euthanasia of healthy animals by stopping pet
overpopulation at its source. The Betty Fund pays all or most of the entire
cost of the spay/neuter surgery for pets belonging to families in need. Since
the program began, ACN has assisted in the spaying or neutering of more than
12,000 Western North Carolina cats and dogs.
This
year’s fundraiser is more crucial than ever for Animal Compassion Network’s
Betty Fund Spay/Neuter Program to be able to continue offering financial
assistance to the community. In 2012 ACN’s Companion Animal Transport Program
pulled over 500 unwanted, homeless dogs, puppies and kittens from area shelters
where there is little hope and transported them from WNC to safe-for-life
organizations in northern states where there are lines of people waiting to
adopt a rescued pet. One of the most poignant facts surrounding the high demand
in northern states for adoptable pets is due to the success of long standing
spay and neuter programs in those areas. Instead of closing their doors and
patting themselves on the back for a job well done, these shelters are reaching
out to areas where programs are striving to achieve the same success: No More
Homeless Pets. In 2012 Animal Compassion Network provided assistance for the
spaying and neutering of over 1285 cats and dogs. This record breaking number
shows not only the growing success of the spay/neuter program and changing
attitudes toward responsible pet guardianship, but also the great need in the
community for financial assistance to meet these goals and save lives.
Local
restaurants are very supportive of “Dine to be Kind” and look forward to
helping a very important community fundraiser. In addition to being open
for dinner, many restaurants are also open for breakfast and lunch, so there
are plenty of opportunities to dine to be kind. In fact, many workplaces are
encouraged to order takeout for lunch on National Spay Day, because to-go
orders also help animals in need!
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